romanfatterinne
Syllables
ro-man-fat-ter-in-ne
Pronunciation
/ˈɾuːmɑnˌfɔʈːəɾˌɪnːə/
Stress
010000
Morphemes
romanforfatter + inne
The word 'romanforfatterinne' is a compound noun in Nynorsk, divided into six syllables: ro-man-fat-ter-in-ne. Stress falls on 'fat'. The word consists of the roots 'roman' and 'forfatter' and the feminine suffix '-inne'. Syllable division follows onset maximization and vowel peak principles.
Definitions
- 1
A female author of novels.
Novel writer (female)
“Ho er ein kjend romanforfatterinne.”
“Romanforfatterinna signerte boka mi.”
Stress pattern
Primary stress falls on the third syllable ('fat'), typical for Nynorsk compound nouns. The stress pattern is 0 (unstressed) - 1 (stressed) - 0 (unstressed) - 0 (unstressed) - 0 (unstressed) - 0 (unstressed).
Syllables
ro — Open syllable, initial syllable, vowel-final.. man — Closed syllable, consonant-final.. fat — Closed syllable, stressed syllable, geminate consonant.. ter — Closed syllable, consonant-final.. in — Closed syllable, nasal consonant, geminate consonant.. ne — Open syllable, final syllable, vowel-final.
Word Parts
Onset Maximization
Consonant clusters are kept together at the beginning of a syllable whenever possible (e.g., 'fat', 'ter').
Vowel Peak
Each syllable must contain a vowel sound, forming the nucleus of the syllable.
Sonority Sequencing
Syllables generally follow a sonority hierarchy, with more sonorous sounds (vowels) towards the center and less sonorous sounds (consonants) towards the edges.
- The geminate consonants ('tt', 'nn') are crucial for pronunciation and syllable structure and must be maintained.
- Regional variations in vowel quality may exist, but the core syllable division remains consistent.
Nearby Words
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